ATP-binding cassette domain of hemolysin B, subfamily C. The ABC-transporter hemolysin B is a central component of the secretion machinery that translocates the toxin, hemolysin A, in a Sec-independent fashion across both membranes of E. coli. The hemolysin A (HlyA) transport machinery is composed of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter HlyB located in the inner membrane, hemolysin D (HlyD), also anchored in the inner membrane, and TolC, which resides in the outer membrane. HlyD apparently forms a continuous channel that bridges the entire periplasm, interacting with TolC and HlyB. This arrangement prevents the appearance of periplasmic intermediates of HlyA during substrate transport. Little is known about the molecular details of HlyA transport, but it is evident that ATP-hydrolysis by the ABC-transporter HlyB is a necessary source of energy.
No pairwise interactions are available for this conserved domain.
Total Mutations Found: 154 Total Disease Mutations Found: 73 This domain occurred 43 times on human genes (94 proteins).
If you've navigated here from a protein, hovering over a position on the weblogo will display the corresponding protein position for that domain position.
The histograms below the weblogo indicate mutations found on the domain. Red is for disease (OMIM) and blue is for SNPs.
Functional Features are displayed as orange boxes under the histograms. You can choose which features are displayed in the box below.
Range on the Protein:
Protein ID Protein Position
Domain Position:
Feature Name:
Total Found:
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